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Port Hope said:Offensichtlich, brauche ich ein "spellcheck" auf Deutsch!
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Port Hope said:Offensichtlich, brauche ich ein "spellcheck" auf Deutsch!
I wish to think many Canadian will soon be saying HARPER BRING OUR TROOPS HOME. All Canadians are very supportive of all our Brave Man and Woman, but in a war that has been raging in their land for centuries it is time they decided their destiny for themselves.The Ruxted Group said:Please post all responses to The Afghanistan Debate here.
annamarie temple said:I wish to think many Canadian will soon be saying HARPER BRING OUR TROOPS HOME. All Canadians are very supportive of all our Brave Man and Woman, but in a war that has been raging in their land for centuries it is time they decided their destiny for themselves.
War is hell, Afghanistan is worse
When we lose eight smiling young men, couldn't someone somewhere just say -- out loud -- 'What a terrible and meaningless waste of lives'
Janice Kennedy, The Ottawa Citizen
Published: Sunday, April 15, 2007
Cliches are like convenience foods -- easy, predictable, often bland. We stuff them into our mouths gratefully when we don't feel like thinking.
No news is good news. Look for the silver lining. Chalk it up to experience. Who ever said life was fair?
We hear cliches and we see them in print. They spring up, weed-like, every time we pick up a newspaper and find a story about someone who has "struggled with addictions" (apparently without success, we think uncharitably) or a person "struggling to come to terms with" some fresh grief.
But cliches do more than save time and effort. They are also effective screens. When an ugly truth needs to be disguised, there's no better mask, ironically, than a threadbare cliche.
The masking cliches have been bombarding us during the past week. Ever since the latest disaster in Afghanistan and its grim timing during the Vimy memorializations, cringe-making cliches have been pouring out of the mouths of politicians, military brass, media types and -- because the words have become molecules in the very air they breathe -- those who knew the eight young men killed last week.
We have heard endlessly about "the fallen" (and its variation, "fallen heroes"), a quaint phrase informed by Victorian imagery instead of modern reality -- in this case, unwitting targets in a vehicle blown up by an unseen device set by unseen enemies. Martial mythology notwithstanding, the "fallen" in Afghanistan have mostly been unfortunate victims. And while some may indeed have been heroic young men (or "great, great Canadian soldiers," according to one officer), the incident that took their lives resounded less with heroism and great Canadianness than with terrible tragic timing.
Justifications for war, particularly catastrophic ones, are often embroidered with empty phrases that ring with an authoritative and stoic nobility. In the Canadian disaster that is the current mission, they're all about "the price of freedom," "firm resolve" to do "the job," and "making a difference" to the people of that ancient, sad place.
"If we stop everything and we don't focus on the job that has to be done over there," said Col. Ryan Jestin, commander of the Gagetown base, "the Taliban will have won."
I have nothing but admiring and grateful respect for our troops. In our name, they do hard things most of us could never do, and they pay dreadful prices. Supporting the troops is not the issue (despite the simplistic party line that tells me I can't support the troops and criticize the mission. I can. And I do.) What appalls me are the insidious cliches that blur the unacceptable and try to pass it off as a good thing.
The deaths of Canadian soldiers and Afghan civilians are indisputably tragic. But none of the cliches ever answers the tough questions. Why Afghanistan and not, say, Darfur? Whose freedom are we fighting for, really? How is this achieving it? Why is our commitment so different from that of some other NATO countries? If we're there to help little girls go to school, why aren't we freeing the oppressed girls and women of neighbouring nations?
The questions are as endless as the cliches that mask them. In his speech at Vimy, Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced Sunday's deaths by saying that it had been "a difficult day" in Afghanistan (brave understatement also goes down well), adding, "Our hearts ache for them and their families. And I know as we gather together on Easter Sunday, our thoughts and our prayers are with them."
Fine words. But while it's a safe bet that the families touched by the tragedy thought of nothing else on Easter Sunday, the vast majority of other Canadians, while momentarily sympathetic, spent most of their day thinking of everything but. The truth behind the cliche of enduring solemnity was probably best summed up Wednesday night, opening night of the NHL playoffs, with Don Cherry's tacky display: an incoherent reference to the breaking news of the two latest deaths, pictures of Sunday's dead soldiers, picture of the dog of one of the dead soldiers, Cherry stumbling over the names, Cherry getting choked up. Then back to the game.
Like that of most Canadians, Cherry's heart may be in the right place. But not for too long.
Still, the cliches of easy sentimentality abound, especially for politicians. Observed Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor, "The dedication and bravery of these soldiers will be forever remembered." Newfoundland premier Danny Williams said, "Our hearts are broken for the families of those who have sacrificed their lives so tragically and valiantly."
Fallen heroes. Firm resolve. Getting the job done. The price of freedom. Thoughts and prayers. Broken hearts. Valiant sacrifice.
When we lose eight smiling young men, some of them barely out of boyhood, in a bloodbath that is stupid and pointless, couldn't someone somewhere just say -- out loud, for the whole country to hear -- "What a terrible and meaningless waste of lives. It is time to stop this obscenity. Now."
Of course, the timing with Vimy, and its solemn and wholly appropriate memorialization, only enhanced last week's insidious use of masking cliches. The prime minister, the defence minister and the foreign affairs minister all hammered home a simplistic theme of Vimy-Afghanistan continuity. For the prime minister, Kandahar is a contemporary Flanders Fields, and Canadian soldiers are again picking up the torch -- Afghanistan's fallen heroes being but one small remove from Vimy's. The tunes of glory are blaring and the cliches working overtime, all tacitly encouraging a culture of fighting with honour and dying pro patria.
Old men and comfortably safe politicians have always sent the young off to war in their stead, to die or be maimed or survive with scars that never entirely fade. The lust for, and indifference to, human cannon fodder has been a function of ruling-class psychology since the earliest conflicts of the race. Little has changed.
Historians of the Great War have long lamented the terrible loss during those years of the "flower of a generation," including 66,000 mostly young Canadians. But we still mouth the old platitudes. The obscenity continues.
The average age of our 53 Canadian military victims in Afghanistan is 29 years old. More than half were in their 20s. A third were under 25. A couple of the boys still had traces of acne on their faces, for God's sake. What monstrous logic ever judged that acceptable? What twisted politics ever decided that young, brimming lives were a fair trade-off for the sloganeering of a futile and ill-advised cause?
What cliches, seamlessly woven into our cultural fabric, ever inspired 20-year-olds like Newfoundland's Pte. Kevin Kennedy to say that he and his buddies were "really pumped" about upcoming operations? "We've trained for years," he told an interviewer excitedly in March, a month before his death, "and we are finally going to go out and do our job."
That must have been how the lads spoke as they headed overseas during the Second World War -- the difference being that Hitler's Nazis rendered that conflict necessary. But the pumped-up language of cliche remains the same, and it is easy to see how effective it can be, even without a legitimate cause.
Pumped-up imagery is also effective, especially the situational cliches we've constructed, orgies of emotional excess heavy with ceremonial salutes and pipers' laments, glib comments about final journeys and deaths not being in vain, and hollow vows of eternal remembrance (usually followed by more glib comments about "finding ways to move on").
For the families and loved ones, there is no cliche in any of this. The pain is unique and vows of remembrance real. It is the rest of us, revelling in the emotional artificiality, who have cheapened the process and transformed it into self-indulgent, and self-repeating, cliche.
Trite phrases about heroism and the great euphemism known as the fallen may mask reality, but they won't change it. They won't transform into success the failure that is Afghanistan. All those vital young lives solemnly eulogized by busy politicians at carefully staged speaking engagements will remain forever vital young lives wasted on a dusty and unwinnable stretch of distant terrain.
All cliches are lazy, some are dishonest and some are dangerous. When we're talking as a nation and as individuals about our deepest values -- peace, dialogue, our sons and daughters -- it may be time to find fresh modes of expression.
Janice Kennedy is a Citizen senior writer whose column appears here weekly.
© The Ottawa Citizen 2007
I also support the troops, that is a given, but.....
My question is " If 160,000 Soviet troops and 240,000 Afghan Communist soldiers could not defeat the Pashtuns in ten years, how can 50,000 U.S. and NATO troops do better? "
Why we are not in Darfur
Janice Kennedy, in her column "War is hell, Afghanistan is worse" (April 15), asks "Why Afghanistan and not, say, Darfur?" There are very good reasons why. The NATO mission in Afghanistan has the unanimous authorization of the U.N. Security Council and is there at the invitation of the legitimately elected government of the country.
Meanwhile, the government of Sudan refuses to allow an effective U.N. force to be deployed to Darfur. Without that permission, peacemaking in Darfur can only take the form of an invasion of Sudan, with no Security Council mandate. Such an invasion would certainly be bloody and raise the wrath of the Muslim world. Hence there is no appetite in the international community for such a course of action.
Does Ms Kennedy think that Canada should invade Sudan on its own? If so, how does she propose that we do it?
Mr Margolis' mythical "oil corridor"
Eric Margolis, in his column "Afghanistan fight will only get tougher (April 15), raises yet again the ludicrous idea that the international effort in that country is all about oil. He writes: "What we are really seeing is a war by Western powers seeking to dominate the strategic oil corridor of Afghanistan..."
What nonsense. Afghanistan in no oil corridor of any sort. Most Central Asian oil is in Kazakhstan, far to the west and Kazakhstan has no need for Afghanistan as a pipeline route. Kazakh oil is exported via Russia and to China. It will now be shipped, following an agreement with Azerbaijan last year, across the Caspian Sea to Azerbaijan and onward by pipeline to a Turkish port on the eastern Mediterranean. Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, which have much smaller oil reserves than Kazakhstan, equally have no need for any Afghan pipeline should they ever become major oil exporters.
References:
http://www.oilgasarticles.com/articles/195/2/Oil-and-Gas-Infrastructure-in-Afghanistan/Page2.html
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/Kazakhstan/Oil.html
http://www.bicusa.org/en/Article.2862.aspx
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/Caspian/Oil.html
A war of diminishing returns
LYSIANE GAGNON
From Monday's Globe and Mail
On Sunday, they were six. On Wednesday, they were eight, pushing the death toll of Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan to 53. In Quebec, where opposition to this war is already stronger than anywhere else in Canada, one can expect that the anger will double in August, once the 2,000 soldiers based in Valcartier, Que., are sent to Afghanistan. Inevitably, some of them will be brought home in body bags. The public outcry will be huge.
This is why retired general Roméo Dallaire, arguably the only military figure popular in Quebec, embarked last week on a one-man mission to try to diffuse the anti-war sentiment. "International responsibility is more than foreign-aid money and missionaries," he pleaded in an interview aimed at a French audience. "It also demands sweat, grit and sometimes the blood of our young people."
But his plea might fall on deaf ears. My guess is that many Quebeckers would agree with François Avard's furious reply. In a letter to La Presse, Mr. Avard, a successful screenplay writer, sarcastically noted that indeed, "young people" rather than "old generals" are sacrificed in war, and mocked Mr. Dallaire's Churchillian arguments: "We are not Londoners under the Nazi bombs. Montreal is not burning! . . . Why spill blood to support Hamid Karzai's corrupt government?"
The rest of Mr. Avard's piece is a rehash of dreamy-eyed pacifist theories, but he has a point. Even those who believe that wars can be fought for just causes, that force is the only solution to certain conflicts, are beginning to have doubts about Canada's involvement in Afghanistan. This mission reminds me of Albert Camus's masterworks, Le Mythe de Sisyphe.
In his essay on the absurdity of life, the great French writer-philosopher evoked the tragic fate of Sisyphus, a mythical figure of ancient Greece, whom the gods had condemned to push a huge rock to the top of a mountain, only to see it roll down the other side. This he would repeat eternally. "The gods," Camus writes, "knew that there is no worse punishment than performing a task that is both useless and hopeless."
The Afghan mission seems increasingly entrapped in a similar conundrum. A school is built only to be demolished the next day. The massive efforts to befriend the population are pulverized as soon as Afghan civilians are killed in a fire exchange between military convoys and Taliban insurgents. For each Taliban who falls, there is a young neighbour who picks up his rifle and there are 10, 20, 50 new recruits arriving through the porous border with Pakistan.
The original aim of this war was to eradicate the main source of international terrorism, but reports from U.S. intelligence agencies indicate that al-Qaeda has reconstructed its training camps in Pakistan, in the mountainous regions of Waziristan. It is now widely known that the Taliban can count on powerful allies within the Pakistani military.
And what is the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's goal? It is to reinforce the democratically elected Afghan government -- a laudable goal in itself, except that Mr. Karzai's government turns out to be corrupt and inefficient, hated by many Afghans and linked to the warlords who profit from the opium trade.
The height of absurdity was reached recently when one of the Afghan policemen who inquired into the murder of Canadian diplomat Glyn Berry asked for asylum in Canada because he had received death threats. Why on Earth would Canada send its young men and women to a country deserted by its own police?
Especially troubling is the fact that for years now, the heavy task of bringing order to the most dangerous areas of Afghanistan has fallen almost exclusively on the Americans, British, Dutch and Canadians, while other countries maintain small contingents in the more peaceful areas of northern Afghanistan and steadfastly refuse to endanger their troops.
Instead of blindly promising to stay in Afghanistan until 2009, the Harper government should put serious pressure on NATO to ensure that all its partners equally share the burden. Then it would be easier to support the Afghan mission.
lgagnon@lapresse.ca
Baden Guy said:[Heavy sarcasm on] Truly an amazing article. [heavy sarcasm off]
Baden Guy said:[Heavy sarcasm on] Truly an amazing article. [heavy sarcasm off]
Baden Guy said:[Heavy sarcasm on] Truly an amazing article. [heavy sarcasm off]